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t KmioIDS I (GRANULES) ?21 INDIGESTION Dissolve instantly on tongue* or in hot or cold water, or vichy. Try at soda fountain. QUICK RELIEF! ALSO IN TABLET FORM NADS Or SCOTT * BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION 1 o * Church Directory * * V * First Uaptist Church, Myron W. Gordon, Pastor. n cervices every Sunday. Sunday School Exercises 10 a. m. Morning worship and preaching' 11:15 a. m. Evening' worship and preaching' 7 p. m. Prayer meeting services every Tuesday 7:30 p. m. Strangers and visitors cordially welcomed to all these services. _ | Kingston Presbyterian Church, J. M. Leinmon, Pastor. Services every Sunday morning. Sunday School at 10 a. m. Morning worship and preaching at 11:15 a. m. Prayer meeting services Tuesday 7:30 p. ni. Wo welcome one and all to our services. Conway Methodist Church, J. C. Atkinson, Pastor. Services every Sunday. Departmental Church School 10 a. m. Bible Class for men only 10 a. m. Morning worship and preaching 11:15 a. m. Evening worship 7 p. m. Prayer meeting services Wednesday evening 7 o'clock. Welcome extended to everybody to attend all services. TINS ONLY AT YOUR GROCERS piAXWELL HOUSE | COFFEE . w 1 I ^ Now the New Year holds i there will ever be will bring. But this m fore us like a glea hope and brings t< rl a x.'c i"av viujf O 1U1 U^lltl VV *J And this 1 willing to co-open CO 4fll HIHHH^HIHIHBHHMH HI OF VELOURS AND FUR ^v vw^ w ^;> v ^^^HBawKfyy^VAcffviM BP"* ? V VA Whoever I alls to be pleusA ! with the superb example of good designing In suits which uppeara above will look far to Ami anything better. It l? made of velours with collar atid pork* etN of fur. and Is decorutc 1 with ?llk embroidery. . ? TAX NOTICE. The books will be open for the collection, of taxes for fiscal year 1920,1 from October 15th to December 31st,? 11)20, without penalty. I Payable during' January with 1 per J cent, penalty; during February 1 poi ; cant, additional, and- 5 per cent, additional for March, making i\ total of 7 per cent, from March 1st to 15th, at which time the books will close. REGULAR TAX LEVY The regular tax levy f >r 1920 is as follows: Mills State tax 12 Constitutional school tax .3 / \...l - ... i wrumdi v county purposes !) Township road fund 21 I Total 26 For Bucks, Conway, Dog Bluff, Bayboro, Galivants Ferry, Green Sea, Little River and Dogwood Neck townships an extra levy of two mills (2) for township road fund, and for Flodys Township an extra levy of five mills (5) for township road fund. An additional levy to pay special taxes voted for school purposes in certain districts is as follows: Districts Mills No. 1 Port Harrelson 8 Mm. 2 Ever Green 10 No. 3 Dog Bluff H No. 4 Baynoro 8j % New Year dawns?rosy with for you or for us we cannot km accounts of success and joy ar iuch we DO KNOW: A gla< ming, radiant page, awaiting tl ) us the promise of glorious op] >rk and more conscientious serv bank wants you to remember t ate, to advise and to serve, witl We are wis N W A V % I fir* tjwwv it**"P AT,TV Wi No. 5 Sandy Plain sjl No. 6 Athens 8; * No. 7 Green Sea 36 ? No. 8 Bear Bay 4 ?, No. 0 Little River 16 J, too. 10 Dogwood Neck 8 V No. 11 Socastee 18 ^ No. 12 Collins Creek 8 ; No. 13 Withers 8 ^ No. 14 Savannah Bluff *12 No. 15 Haw Branch 5 No. 10 Pine Grove 8 No. 17 Wannamaker 1- * No. 18 Loris 20 1 No. 19 Burroughs 16:( No. 20 Mt. Olive 16 ( No. 21 White Oak 8 < No. 22 Burcol 8 1 No. 23 Good Hope 8 No. 24 Cedar Grove 8 No. 25 Gurley 8 j No. 2(5 Cool Spring 8 < No. 27 Zioil 8 < No. 28 Chapel Hill 8 < No. 20 Powell 8 , No. 80 Princeville 8 No. 31 Sidney 8 No. 32 Hickory Grove 8 , No. 33 Finklea 11 > No. i 0"k Gvove 8 No. 35 Howard 8 No. 30 Grassy Bay 24 No. 37 Midway 8 No. 88 Hickory Hill 16 No. 30 Simpson Creek 8 No. 40 Jovncr Swamp 8 No. 41 Daisy 81 No. 42 Hughes Mill 8| No. 43 Hulls Island 8 1 No. 44 Deep Brr.n^h 8 j No. 45 Tilly Swamp 8 J No. 46 Oakland 16! No. 47 Red Hill Si No. 47 Eight Mile 30 I No. 48 Eight Mile 30 Mo. 49 lied Dluff ^ 1 No. 50 Floyds No. 51 Flovds X Roads 8 No. 52 Popular Ilill ** No. 53 Aiien S No. 54 Valley Forge 8' No. 55 Knotty Branch 8 No. 56 Sanford No. 57 Sweet Homo 10 No. 58 Johnson 8 No. 51) High Point * ,v No. 01 Wam pee 1No. 03 Tlchoboth * No. 64 Enterprise I1 No. 07 Mt. Pisgah 8 No. 08 Homewood 8 No. 08 Maple 8 Mo. 70 Poplar 8 No. 71 Shell 8 No. 72 Leon 8 No. 73 Mt. Herman 8 No. 74 Four Mile 8 No. 75 Virgo 2 i Mm or 1 1 Mo. 77 Strawfield 3 No. 78 Ebenezer 8 No. 80 Spring Branch 14 No. 81 Salem 8 No. 82 Mill Swamp 8 No. 83 Red Hill 8 No. 84 Branson 8 No. 85 Watts 8 No. 87 Norton 8 No. 88 Waccamaw 8 No. 8!) Seven Mile 8 ????? t ' f ' .f S .' ' , -.A f* ** . .* * . * 'A- >> r *> -/i' ' # ' :<A WvJ * >* promise of better things; glowi )w. We are not permitted to r< id happiness for some, while f< A, new, unspoiled Season is up* he final record of the year s ac< portunity. What greater thii ice? hat throughout each day of the 1 friendliness and promptness a hing you a Very Ha N A 1 VY, S C , DE^0^92^^ Mo. 90 Pauley Swamp 8 I Co. 79 Buck sport *' I Mo. 92 Vaughto 4 Mo. 94 Oak Grove S Mo. 9.~i Twelve Mile 8 Jo. 96 Eldorado .8 Mo. 97 Carolina S 98 Kingston 10 j Mo. 9'.) Ay nor 1<> i Mo. 101 Pleasant Grove 12 SCHOOL HOUSE BOND TAX. An additional lc>'y of the two mills 2) in Districts Nos. 19 and SO, and n District No. G1 an additional levy i >f one mill is made to pay interest ' m the school house bonds, and to create a sinking fund for their fi\al retirement. CAPITATION TAX. ] A poll tax of one dollar, for school purposes, is levied upon every male :itizen between the ajres of 21 and 30 years, able to earn a living, except Confederate veterans over 50 years old. , CAPITATION DOG TAX. A capitation tax of one dollar is j evied upon each d >n the i??un<v. COMMUTATION ROAD TAX. i Road tax for li>21 is $12.00 and , payable from Januarv 1st to March i 15th, 1921. ' , FISHFRY STAMPS. < Fishery stamps can be obtained at ' the county treasurer's office at any 1 time. Those who write for statement of taxes will p'case estate whether or not their property is all in one school v.1 i - I . V,. I Not yet having received Hie tax books for the collection of taxes, 1 find that 1 shall not be able to write up the books after 1 get then in time to make the trip over the county for the collection of taxes, therefore | all collections will be made at the office in Conway. W. L. BELLAMY, Adv.|12|0|'it County Treasurer. NOT UK or SALK. By virtue of the order of His Honor, T. S. Sease, Presiding .Judge, dated October 2nd, 1920, and also by ' virtue of an execution bearing the ! same date in the case of l.oris Hard-) ware & Furniture Comp: nv, Plain-1 tiff, against C. B. Jordan, Defend- j ant, I will sell to the highest bidder for cash, at the hour of eleven (11) i o'clock, in front of the courthouse! door at Conway, South Carolina, on salesday in January next, it being the third day of said month, all <.t i i.1. ? i? n ? - ... ? uiL* louowing personal property, to wit: * One section harrow, thiee Mucins Plows, three John Deer 7-inch, one middle breaker, one Cole planter, one Coie distributor, one Davidson plow, four goose neck hoes, one sprayer, two sweeps, two balls binder twine, one definder, one "Riding-ton plow and one stiison wrench. J. A. Lewis, Sheriff of Horry Countv. Dated Dec. 9, A D 1920. ' 12116 ti The old ye made; the bound in t are its joys and failures, i pointments. T1 last scene in x\ ng with services to he reticle red ead hurriedly or far ahead, bu :>r others sorrow and disappom on us and it is exceedingly bri? :omplishments. Its very aspec lg can we ask for than three New Year it will be, as alwa ind courtesy, its customers, its i ppy and Prosperous r i o N A WiENT SEARCH |i BRINGS RESULTS; !\dds M'llions to tho Annua! | Production of Our Crops in U. S. ! < i FIGURES ARE GIVEN '! ABOUT NEW PLANTS 1 l ( i Department has Certainly Paid ] for All of Its Cost in Main- (( taining ; j Some of tho resu'N in tho search , "or and introduction. acclimation, i md adaptation of the new crop plants < nto tho United States by the Popart- < neat of Agriculture are spectacular, j ndeed, almost romantic, says the Sec- j etary of Agriculture in his annual rel* aort to the ^resident. now made ( | Dili>1 ic. To illustrate what tho intro- i 1 luction of some of these plant ? has j < neant to the agricultural wealth of n the Nation .the Secretary says: , "Durum wheat, introduced in 1S91*|' from Russia, now produces a crop h wovth $">0,000,000 annually. Kirvp- ; iKin couon, Drought hv the scientists! ;>f the department in 1901, has become the basis of the long-sta pie ; cotton industry in tiie Southwest, valued at $(>,000,000 in 1917. $11,000.000 in 1918, and *20,000,000 in 1010." itulfa, a native of central Asia, brought into the Western States in ' about lOal, lias become in a generation almost the basic crop of the West, according to the report. The , sorghums are tho basis of the great agricultural development of thel semiarid Southwest. Japanese ri'\'v,| secured in 1899, were the foundations i of the greal rice industry <>f Louisiana and Texas. The Washington ' Navel orange, introduced from lira- | zil in 1872, makes up the bulk of the California orange industry, producing! a crop valued at approximately $lf>,00O.009 a r. Continuing, the Secretary said: ''The culture of dates in California and Arizona is already a thriving business, which is expanding rapidly, and will in the near future have impressive value. Sudan grass, intro- J duced in 1909 from Egypt, is now; worth over $10,000,000 annually. Feterita, secured in 190(> from Kgypt, produced in 1918 a crop valued at ? 1 (>,000,000. Over 1,000 varities of soybeans have been introduced from' China and other parts of ,the Orient, j From these the experts of the department have, after careful tests,; Pil oio'lit nf Kr?ct *??i vil mc which arc now largely cultivated ami arc an important element in the very | ^AR is gone; the final record c!o he Book of Rem< . and sorrows, its ? its happiness ar hie curtain has fall le year 1920. I, responsibilities to be shoultle I on those mystic pages that co itment and loss. Wh o can s *ht and beautiful and fair. E. t breathes achievements; it is : hundred and sixty-live spier ys, your friend and confidant, neighbors and its friends. New Year * i L_ DA -? tip?'! increase in I'o-lfn production, 'eruvian alfalfa, introduced in 1S99, s by far the most productive and aluable variety for the Southwest. * The Soarch for (Jrasses. Scientists are convinced that here arc still great possibilities in he search f<>r new crops especially "or plant tV't avp cultivated little, r not at in their native country. Perhaps this is most strikingly exhibited in grosses. many of which we been introduced .accidentally, rhus blue grass, white clover, redtop, timothy, and many others which lame original'v from Eurone make 10 nearly -ill the grass lands of the North, and Bermuda grass from Incarpet grass from the West Inlies, Dallis from Argentina, ind lespedezn from Asia have performed a similar role in the South. California's pastures consist mainly :>f species from tho Mediterranean reirion, such as alfilaria, bur clover, wild oats, wild barley, and numerous others. There are undoubtedly in Centra1 A^?a many species which, if properly selected and introduced, will add greatly to tho carrying capacity of the western rai ge^. aside from what can be accomplished by rational range management. From this reirion came alfalfa and sweet clover, both important in tho West. There is ever\ reason to believe ;i 1 so that good grasses and legumes can !>e found for the cut-over lands of the South, and thus prepare the way for the further deve'opment of tho ii\^sto'ck industry in that section. It is impossible to bring in new grasses or other valuable crop plants from remote and a'most inaccessible p:;rts )i' tho world without sending: properly trained explorers, and larger funds for this w >rk are needed. y ...? <f'nr V.SiHvY NO TICK. There has be on taken up by m<* one sandy colored ho#, about jrrown, marked with crop in rij;ht ear rnd crop anil undrrbit i:i tho h f. ear. Owner may obtain the animal by applying- to the understood and pay injr charge- and the cost of thi ; advert i: emert. CLARENCE .1 OHNSOX, !2 23 3t Conway, S. C. To Stop a Cough Quick take HAYES' HEALING HONEY, a cough medicine which stops the cough by healing the inflamed and irritated tissues. A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and Croup is enclosed with every bottle of HAYES* HEALING HONEY. The salve should be rubbed on the chest and throat of children suffering from a Cold or Croup. The healing effort of Haves' Healing Honey inside the throat combined with the healing effect of Grove's O-Pen-Trate Salve through the pores of the skin soon stops a cough. Both remedies are parked In one carton and the cost of tho combined treatment is 35c. Just ask your druggist for HAYES' utr* A i u/\kin\/ mmmmmjm^ mm ma \ ^mmmmmmmmmmmmummrnmmm^ ^ ^ last entry I 'sec!, and I ernbrance I successes I id disap- I en on the 3 [ I ired. what the mpnse its record ay what a year | [ ach day lies he- | transcribed with idid, untouched | ever-ready and 1 N K